•Are We Ready to Use Wikipedia to Teach Writing?Inside Higher Ed, DCBy Robert E. Cummings Several years ago I started asking students in my composition classes to compose entries for Wikipedia. Most of my students were familiar with Wikipedia as the most popular link at the top of a Web page after a Google search. ...

The first model, which is the official one, is that Wikipedia is an authentic encyclopedia that seeks to compile and publish the sum of all human knowledge.

The second model, which is more diagnostic of the actual workings of the site, is that it functions as a dramaturgy workshop for those engaged in the ofttimes contentious process of determining what subjects are worthy of articles and what content to include in those articles.

For many vested participants, the dramaturgy aspect (which is inherently more emotionally charged than the dry academic perspective) becomes the controlling factor in battles over contentious subjects.

If students undertake to write a brief but otherwise encyclopedic article on an obscure subject, the only issue is whether the topic is important enough to warrant an article at all.

But if students wade into a topic where there are multiple contentious points of view, they will find themselves in something akin to a post-modern theater of the absurd, battling against other players with cutesy names like KillerChihuahua, FeloniousMonk, Salmon of Doubt, and Centaur of Attention.

The dramaturgical aspect of Wikipedia becomes apparent to anyone who dips into the project long enough to wander into one the areas of persistent contention.

At that point, the ambience often becomes Kafkaesque, with features reminiscent of Alice in Wonderland or the novels of Fyodor Dostoevsky.

One of the unsung affordances of Wikipedia is to approach it in term of its educational value as a high-energy dramaturgy workshop, especially for students who are interested in character-driven dramas. Pick an avatar who presents themselves as any imaginable storybook character ranging from superhero to supervillain, superanalyst to superfool, superblithe to supervictim, and I guarantee you that within a day or two your worst nightmare antagonist will show up to give you shpilkes in the gennecktegessoink.

Jon Awbrey

Thu 12th March 2009, 12:16pm

I know you think you're being cute, Moulton, but in the end your main effect is merely to miseducate.

Any professor who sends students into an experimental field setting like Wikipedia without getting it thoroughly vetted by his Human Subjects Committee, much less having a clue what sorts of miseducation they will really acquire there, should probably be brought up for review.

Please educate yourself, before you further endanger your charges.

Jon Awbrey, 12 March 2009, 8:15am EDT

Moulton

Thu 12th March 2009, 3:24pm

Four more comments have been posted at the site...

QUOTE(Barry Kort)

More Background on Dramaturgy Workshops

Jon raises a good point, that creative writing students who are approaching Wikipedia as a dramaturgy lab should appreciate how Wikipedia functions as a real-time post-modern theater of the absurd.

QUOTE(Mark A. Wilson @ Professor of Geology at The College of Wooster)

Wikipedia as a resource and an educational tool

Well done, Dr. Cummings. Wikipedia is here to stay and it is time that we in higher education learn to use it effectively. I predict that you are about to receive the same angry comments I received for my previous article on the topic -- and from many of the same people. My short response to those who seem paralyzed by the flaws in a public information system: fix them yourself and train your students how to do the same. As public intellectuals, we have an obligation to share our knowledge and research skills. Wikipedia is a superb place to start.

QUOTE(Judy Harris @ Professor of English at LSC-Tomball)

Wiki sites

My students are warned that any Wiki sites are absolutely forbidden. We have a hard enough time getting them to understand how to find reliable, authoritative sites, much less allowing/encouraging them to use open, unreliable sites. The Wikipedia claim is that they correct misinformation that they find has been put up on the site, but I have found that to be haphazard at best. I have found entries that had serious errors that were on there for a long time. I didn't change them for two reasons: I wanted to see if Wiki or someone else would actually make the corrections, and I felt that students should not be using the sites in the first place. My students are even required to visit LIBRARIES and use HARD COPY sources (what a concept!), and I limit the number of ANY kind of computer sources because I still believe (as dated as this may sound) that there is more to be found OFF the computer than people give credit for. I'd much rather my students be sure they have good stuff than depend on iffy "facts"...

QUOTE(Bryce Bunting)

Who are these scary people we are writing for?

Jon's comments have me worried. I didn't realize there were monsters lurking within the electronic walls of Wikipedia, waiting to devour or otherwise harm students.

Give me a break. Do we really think that participating in an online dialogue is going to harm or "miseducate" students? Isn't it this sort of conversation that we hope students will embrace as a result of their education? Granted, it is different than the sorts of interactions that academics have through peer-reviewed journals, conferences, etc. But, the reality is that most of our students will find themselves in work and life-settings very different from academia. But, they all will need to be positioned to think and converse intelligently with an increasingly diverse community of neighbors, co-workers, and friends about any and all subjects from film to sports to science. Engaging them in open content sites seems like a useful way to do this. If there really were a Human Subjects Committee or Institutional Review Board that would have a serious problem with this, they are the ones that should be brought up for review.

I'm tired of knee-jerk reactions to new technologies that have a lot of promise, particularly from "seasoned" academics that are so closed to new ideas that they won't even take the time to investigate the things they are criticizing. Is wikipedia a magic bullet that if used will pump out great students. No. But, we have a responsibility to investigate ways of using new technologies in a meaningful and pedagogically sound way.

Re: "I'm tired of knee-jerk reactions to new technologies that have a lot of promise, particularly from "seasoned" academics that are so closed to new ideas that they won't even take the time to investigate the things they are criticizing."

I speak from experience with new technologies and their promise, and I speak from experience with Wikipedia and its demonstrated failure to live up to its promises.

Re: "we have a responsibility to investigate ways of using new technologies in a meaningful and pedagogically sound way."

Yes, we do.

Educators who are up to meeting their responsibilities, who would trouble themselves to investigate the Internet environments into which they send their students are currently blessed with a lot more help than they had available to them last year.

Several observers appear to be laboring under a mistaken identification of WP with all IT …

QUOTE

On Teaching Grandpa To Suck Eggs

For the sake of a Year 2009 discussion, let's put aside the notion that people who criticize Wikipedia are some sort of Luddite old fogies who just ain't hip to the New Constitution. The critics of Wikipedia that are known to me are rather further ahead of the curve on the use of Web Technologies than many of the uncritics I've been reading here, at least, to judge from the innocence of the latter's remarks. It would be a tragic mistake to think that Wikipedia is a canonical example of "New Technology", or even a very typical example of social media and wiki systems in general.

Jon Awbrey, 12 March 2009, 3:45pm EDT

Jon Awbrey

Thu 12th March 2009, 9:20pm

Remedial Reading …

QUOTE

Character, Conduct, Critical Thinking

JWW,

Yes, I read Mr. Cumming's blogicle.

All of my comments here — like the great majority of my comments on What's Wrong With Wikipedia everywhere else that I've commented — are directed to the practices that learners acquire by participating in particular environments, far and above what they learn by sponging and regurgitating whatever passes for "content" in those settings.

And it is precisely there that What's Wrong With Wikipedia is the Worst that I've seen anywhere.

Jon Awbrey, 12 March 2009, 5:30pm EDT

Jon Awbrey

Fri 13th March 2009, 1:42am

Further discussion …

QUOTE

Not Exactly Run Of The Mill

Re: "We can invoke John Stuart Mill here, who says that all issues are to be discussed, to either expose the fallacies or to strengthen the truth, which itself is only a partial truth seeking to be more fully realized. We must also, according to Mill, embrace eccentricities such as Wikipedia in our search for truth. I'll go for Mill's perspective (as left wing as I am) over the suppression of information, the blackballing of information, any day."

Hear, Hear! But Only Here …

Critical discussion and divergent perspectives are precisely the things that are most suppressed in Wikipedia. You can take critical examination and integrative inquiry only so far before you run up against the undiscussables of the Wikipedia True Believer, and then you will find yourself subject to the Inquisition, the Index Prohibitorum, and Excommunication.

It is fair to describe Wikipedia as an anthropological field experience. You may not know it, but you are sending your students into an alien culture, one where the actual norms of conduct and discourse radically diverge, not only from their loudly espoused principles and policies, but from the standards and practices that responsible educators should be trying to prepare their students to join. Field experiences do of course go with the territory in many disciplines, but they require due preparation and post-briefings to guard against the dangers of "going native" and failing to assimilate participation with critical observation.

Jon Awbrey writes, "Critical discussion and divergent perspectives are precisely the things that are most suppressed in Wikipedia. You can take critical examination and integrative inquiry only so far before you run up against the undiscussables of the Wikipedia True Believer, and then you will find yourself subject to the Inquisition, the Index Prohibitorum, and Excommunication."

There is a new play that just opened in Boston that dramatizes the "discussion" between Galileo and Pope Urban. As we all know, Urban ultimately used his power and authority to squelch Galileo.

One of the marvelous affordances of Wikipedia is that anyone can adopt the role of Galileo, injecting heretical ideas, well supported by scientific evidence, analysis, and reasoning, and run smack dab into a reactionary Pope Urban.

Now such an experience would be both shocking and exasperating if it occurred today in an authentic academic culture. But if one is studying creative writing and seeking to reconstruct a dramatization of an historical event, there is no better psychodrama workshop than the discussion pages of Wikipedia. If you want to reconstruct the experience of Freedom Riders of the US Civil Rights Era, Wikipedia is your venue, bar none.

As Jon observes, Wikipedia offers an unparalleled "anthropological field experience" to reprise almost any scene in the annals of human political history from the advent of the Rule of Law, Due Process, and Civil Rights to the introduction of the Scientific Method, Hypothesis Testing, and Evidence-Driven Reasoning.

All these advances in civilization and historical paradigm shifts were fought tooth and nail by the powers that be. Where else but in the rough and tumble discussion pages of Wikipedia can a 21st Century student reprise and personally relive those thrilling dramas in a heart-pounding, Kafkaesque theater of the absurd?

Jon Awbrey

Fri 13th March 2009, 2:42am

Moulton,

I have said that your tactics are miseducational, but I was inaccurate.

They are a prescription for madness.

And not the good kind.

Jon Awbrey

Moulton

Fri 13th March 2009, 3:42am

I couldn't fail to disagree less.

QUOTE(Jon Awbrey @ Thu 12th March 2009, 10:42pm)

Moulton, I have said that your tactics are miseducational, but I was inaccurate. They are a prescription for madness.

Any article, any blog post, and quite often any casual online comment just seems to bring out the same people with their pre-ground axes ready to attack Wikipedia.

A sure-fire way to pick out these people is things like linking to Wikipedia Review. They portray it as a reasoned critique of Wikipedia, when it is in fact just a glorified bulletin board where the disaffected gather and whinge about Wikipedia rejecting their pet theories, or refusing to accept their blog posts as credible sources.

Yes, Wikipedia has faults, but it will certainly not be improved by cow-towing to people who wave about their academic status or qualifications and demand respect. One of the most prolific posters in the above comments is better known to the Wikipedia community as user "Moulton". Banned on Wikipedia. Banned on Wikiversity. Banned on Wikinews. Might just be a teensy bit biased when it comes to commenting on anyone using Wikipedia?

If you are serious about trying to work with Wikipedia in an academic environment, I would strongly recommend looking at the work of professor Jon Beasley-Murray. His students were set the task of writing articles on Spanish literature, and bringing them up to "good" or "featured" status.

The students who worked on this project went away with a far greater understanding of how to use Wikipedia, how to assess the reliability of any article they read on it, and admitted they were challenged to write to a far higher standard than your average term paper.

Socratic educators are high-functioning "trolls" by most popular definitions.

I define a troll as "someone who asks an arresting question you'd rather not have to answer."

The main reason Socratic interlocutors ask such questions is to highlight questionable beliefs that are ripe for exposure as haphazard "flights of fancy" rather than scientifically grounded hypotheses supported by solid evidence and sound reasoning.

Unlike Donath's definition in the NY Times, the questions asked by Socratic "trolls" are not stupid questions at all.

So why do those laboring under unsustainable misconceptions and delusional beliefs rush to label such insightful and didactic Socratic questions as trollish stupid questions?

(That's not a rhetorical question. I'd really like to know.)

And is there a reliable way to distinguish Socrates from Pseudocrates?

And one more comment...

QUOTE(Andrej Starkis @ Assistant Professor of Law at Massachusetts School of Law)

The naysayers are wrong

As a fellow who teaches writing to would-be lawyers, I commend you. Most of the students I see don't understand -- because they've never been taught -- that writing is at its core a form of communication, not a form of expression. At most, they've heard about the "audience" (a terrible, misleading word that ought to be exiled to stand-up-only use). What that word conjures up for them is anyone's guess, but it's certainly not human.

I have little use for Wikipedia myself, but I've encountered no finer use than that to which you're putting it. It's a shame that the knee-jerk naysayers can't see past their own negative reactions long enough to realize that, as a bonus, your students are learning the limitations of Wikipedia in a way that will stay with them long after they're beyond the range of shrill admonitions.

Andy Starkis

Jon Awbrey

Fri 13th March 2009, 3:30pm

Same Ole Same Ole …

QUOTE

When the Knee-Jerk is on the Other Foot

Labels like "knee-jerker" and "nay-sayer" serve the rhetorical purpose of suggesting that the labelees lack experience with what they criticize. Unless the labelers have more than their own presumptions on that score, then it is they who are denying themselves sources of information that might just save them the grief of having to gain that experience on their own.

That is what communication is all about — is it not? — learning from the experiences of others?

Jon Awbrey, 13 March 2009, 11:45am EDT

Somey

Fri 13th March 2009, 4:46pm

The thing that's getting lost in these blog comments by the pro-WP crowd is something that, to me, should be quite obvious: Wikipedia loyalists (i.e., The Faithful) don't realize the massive extent of the problems they'll encounter if acceptance of Wikipedia in academic environments becomes widespread. They should be trying to avoid it as long as possible, if not actively prevent it. Instead, as usual, they're unable to comprehend the sheer size of the world: "Academia" isn't just a few people with blogs and some spare time, academia is huge, comprised of literally millions of people worldwide, whose interests are diverse enough to touch on at least half of the articles Wikipedia currently carries. (And that's assuming they don't get into the Pokemon and Doctor Who stuff too, just for laughs.) Their attitude seems to be "the more the merrier, no matter what the cost," and "we'll manage somehow!" I'm sorry, but they won't manage - they're just not set up for it. They're not even set up for the numbers and types of users they have now.

As it is, WP can barely handle one or two organized student-editing projects at a time without generating drama. Imagine having hundreds or even thousands of such projects going on concurrently... It would overwhelm the admins and drive away vested contributors by the score. As it stands now, a typical "finished-looking" WP article probably has anywhere from 4 to 10 people watching it - what happens when that number increases to 40 or 50, with most of the editors motivated by the need for a grade? What happens when multiple student projects are working on (i.e., competing over) the same sets of articles?

And needless to say, this is putting aside all the negative publicity that will be generated when many of these student "experiments" end up revealing more about WP's utterly dysfunctional internal processes and politics than they do about how knowledge is shared in the Modern Age.

I'd say the average college professor can be forgiven for not knowing that the WP environment is rife with gamesmanship, petty politics, and territorialism, but a loyal WP editor can't really be forgiven for thinking that an influx of thousands, maybe tens of thousands, of disinterested college students on a semi-annual basis would be a good thing from their own perspective. That's just stupid, it's as simple as that.

Jon Awbrey

Fri 13th March 2009, 6:02pm

QUOTE(Somey @ Fri 13th March 2009, 12:46pm)

I'd say the average college professor can be forgiven for not knowing that the WP environment is rife with gamesmanship, petty politics, and territorialism, but a loyal WP editor can't really be forgiven for thinking that an influx of thousands, maybe tens of thousands, of disinterested college students on a semi-annual basis would be a good thing from their own perspective. That's just stupid, it's as simple as that.

QUOTE(Andrej Starkis @ Assistant Professor of Law at Massachusetts School of Law)

The naysayers are wrong

As a fellow who teaches writing to would-be lawyers, I commend you. Most of the students I see don't understand -- because they've never been taught -- that writing is at its core a form of communication, not a form of expression. At most, they've heard about the "audience" (a terrible, misleading word that ought to be exiled to stand-up-only use). What that word conjures up for them is anyone's guess, but it's certainly not human.

Andy Starkis

Comment: What an odd sentiment from an "academic"! Perhaps English is not this guy's native language? Writing must always be a form of communication to be effective, of course, but what the "effect" is, depends on the purpose of the writing. It might be expository, for entertainment/art, or it may be rhetorical (to convince). There is more "expression" involved in the latter two, to be sure, but expression is always present in any writing, and is a subset of communication, not something that stands in opposition to it.

And what is this guy's objection to the word "audience," especially as a lawyer? Even technical writers speak of audience analysis as a key. Perhaps this lawyer guy is never going to sully himself with trials or appeals and thus will never have the need to convince anybody freely of anything. To be sure, one can use the neutral word "readership", but it lacks something essential, which is that an audience, as is the case with normal public speaking, carries with it the idea of a group of people that you need to continuously convince to free pay attention to you. If they lose interest, wander off, eyes glaze over and shut the book on your screed in the middle, you fail at your primary purpose of communication. If they're not students (perhaps this boob's real problem) you have no way to punish them for that. Instead, when they lose interest in your writing, they essentially punish YOU. Perhaps that's the inhuman thought that benightmares him.

Sorry, Assistant Prof Starkis, but Lord Acton had it right. "Knowledge must be adorned: It must have luster as well as weight, lest it be mistaken for lead instead of gold." Stand-up is HARD.

Milton

Jon Awbrey

Sat 14th March 2009, 2:55am

QUOTE(Milton Roe @ Fri 13th March 2009, 4:17pm)

Comment: What an odd sentiment from an "academic"! Perhaps English is not this guy's native language? Writing must always be a form of communication to be effective, of course, but what the "effect" is, depends on the purpose of the writing. It might be expository, for entertainment/art, or it may be rhetorical (to convince). There is more "expression" involved in the latter two, to be sure, but expression is always present in any writing, and is a subset of communication, not something that stands in opposition to it.

And what is this guy's objection to the word "audience," especially as a lawyer? Even technical writers speak of audience analysis as a key. Perhaps this lawyer guy is never going to sully himself with trials or appeals and thus will never have the need to convince anybody freely of anything. To be sure, one can use the neutral word "readership", but it lacks something essential, which is that an audience, as is the case with normal public speaking, carries with it the idea of a group of people that you need to continuously convince to free pay attention to you. If they lose interest, wander off, eyes glaze over and shut the book on your screed in the middle, you fail at your primary purpose of communication. If they're not students (perhaps this boob's real problem) you have no way to punish them for that. Instead, when they lose interest in your writing, they essentially punish YOU. Perhaps that's the inhuman thought that benightmares him.

Sorry, Assistant Prof Starkis, but Lord Acton had it right. "Knowledge must be adorned: It must have luster as well as weight, lest it be mistaken for lead instead of gold." Stand-up is HARD.

Milton

Oh, don't get your briefs in a bunch — it's probably just Essjay.

Ja Ja

EricBarbour

Sat 14th March 2009, 4:32am

Jon Awbrey

Sun 15th March 2009, 1:06pm

QUOTE

Wikipedia Culture

Make no mistake about it, the Culture of Wikipedia is alien to the values of a civil society, a free press, and a liberal education that most of us, I'm guessing, have spent our lives trying to advance.

I am well aware that the deviations between the respective value systems may seem slight at first — in large part because of the dissembling mimicry that Wikipedists use to camouflage their real character — but the divergence in values is decisive and radical.

And so we have Secretary Dumsfeld to thank for importing dominant elements of Wikipedia Culture into our midst, specifically, the use of baby talk about "trolls" to defame anyone who dares to criticize their glorious enterprise, as always, hiding behind silly pseudonyms as a way of avoiding responsibility for their statements.

Jon Awbrey, 15 March 2009, 8:04pm EDT

Milton Roe

Sun 15th March 2009, 4:52pm

QUOTE(Jon Awbrey @ Fri 13th March 2009, 7:55pm)

QUOTE(Milton Roe @ Fri 13th March 2009, 4:17pm)

Comment: What an odd sentiment from an "academic"! Perhaps English is not this guy's native language? Writing must always be a form of communication to be effective, of course, but what the "effect" is, depends on the purpose of the writing. It might be expository, for entertainment/art, or it may be rhetorical (to convince). There is more "expression" involved in the latter two, to be sure, but expression is always present in any writing, and is a subset of communication, not something that stands in opposition to it.

And what is this guy's objection to the word "audience," especially as a lawyer? Even technical writers speak of audience analysis as a key. Perhaps this lawyer guy is never going to sully himself with trials or appeals and thus will never have the need to convince anybody freely of anything. To be sure, one can use the neutral word "readership", but it lacks something essential, which is that an audience, as is the case with normal public speaking, carries with it the idea of a group of people that you need to continuously convince to free pay attention to you. If they lose interest, wander off, eyes glaze over and shut the book on your screed in the middle, you fail at your primary purpose of communication. If they're not students (perhaps this boob's real problem) you have no way to punish them for that. Instead, when they lose interest in your writing, they essentially punish YOU. Perhaps that's the inhuman thought that benightmares him.

Sorry, Assistant Prof Starkis, but Lord Acton had it right. "Knowledge must be adorned: It must have luster as well as weight, lest it be mistaken for lead instead of gold." Stand-up is HARD.

Milton

Oh, don't get your briefs in a bunch — it's probably just Essjay.

Ja Ja

If I knew it was Essjay, I'd actually feel better. But I'm pretty sure it's an Essjay mind, hiding in the body of a 30-something associate professor and actually credentialed. And teaching.

Sigh. This is just middle-aged angst. I'm getting to the point that the president of the US is younger than I am, and I can see Emperor's New Clothes even on a lot of Experts in my own field. I see them getting large grants for doing worthless shit. I shoulda specialized more.

Have you ever heard of an eighth-horse? It's a horse that can run a furlong faster than any other horse. No? Well, neither has anybody else. Even if you had a genuine one, they'd laugh at you.

Jon Awbrey

Sun 15th March 2009, 5:04pm

QUOTE(Milton Roe @ Sun 15th March 2009, 12:52pm)

If I knew it was Essjay, I'd actually feel better. But I'm pretty sure it's an Essjay mind, hiding in the body of a 30-something associate professor and actually credentialed. And teaching.

Sigh. This is just middle-aged angst. I'm getting to the point that the president of the US is younger than I am, and I can see Emperor's New Clothes even on a lot of Experts in my own field. I see them getting large grants for doing worthless shit. I shoulda specialized more.

Have you ever heard of an eighth-horse? It's a horse that can run a furlong faster than any other horse. No? Well, neither has anybody else. Even if you had a genuine one, they'd laugh at you.

Yeah, maybe that's what I hate so much about Wikipedia. It shoulda been a paradise for retired generalists in the sun — we coulda been the glial cells that held the whole s/he-bang together — instead it's just one anti-therapeutic e-schlock after another.

QUOTE(Brian @ Associate Prof at Big State U on March 15, 2009 at 5:00pm EDT)

Bored now

Thank you Robert Cummings.

I've used Wikipedia-based writing assignments in my classes for the past five years with great success. I routinely refer students to Wikipedia entries and blog posts for supplemental information. Information literacy a central theme of any class I teach.

So, I had to laugh at the thought of being "written up" for not seeking IRB approval for the use of Wikipedia. Hilarious! Next, you're going to tell me that blogs are unreliable because they're written by people in pajamas with funny screen names. I'm familiar with all of the arguments leveled against Wikipedia in this thread. And I was familiar with them five years ago. It's comforting to note that the anti-Wiki arguments have not gained in sophistication or evidence in the last half decade. It's also comforting that -- just as blogs have gained credibility -- more and more of my colleagues are using Wikipedia as a teaching tool.

The anti-Wiki trolls are doing a fine job marginalizing themselves -- the rest of us are coming to carry on as if it were 2009.

Jon Awbrey

Mon 16th March 2009, 12:02am

Inside Higher Ed appears to be censoring comments now. The one I posted this morning has not gone through after a couple of tries.

QUOTE(Brian @ Associate Prof at Big State U on March 15, 2009 at 5:00pm EDT)

Bored now

Thank you Robert Cummings.

I've used Wikipedia-based writing assignments in my classes for the past five years with great success. I routinely refer students to Wikipedia entries and blog posts for supplemental information. Information literacy a central theme of any class I teach.

So, I had to laugh at the thought of being "written up" for not seeking IRB approval for the use of Wikipedia. Hilarious! Next, you're going to tell me that blogs are unreliable because they're written by people in pajamas with funny screen names. I'm familiar with all of the arguments leveled against Wikipedia in this thread. And I was familiar with them five years ago. It's comforting to note that the anti-Wiki arguments have not gained in sophistication or evidence in the last half decade. It's also comforting that — just as blogs have gained credibility — more and more of my colleagues are using Wikipedia as a teaching tool.

The anti-Wiki trolls are doing a fine job marginalizing themselves — the rest of us are coming to carry on as if it were 2009.

I'm not sure, but I think Citizendium's entry requirements would prevent students from being full-fledged editors. Things may have changed since the last time I checked. I recall Sanger having started an Eduzendium project, which I'm guessing just from the name might be designed for the purposes we are discussing here.

Sanger is to be credited for trying to fix a couple of the worst bugs in the Wikipedia system, the use of pseudonyms and the alienation of experience, but he is responsible for most of the basic tenets of the Old Time Wikipediot Faith, and he made the mistake, in my judgment, of importing the same tenets whole cloth into Citizendium. And don't get me started on his bureaucratomania …

Then again, Citizendium could hardly do worse than Wikipedia, no matter how hard it tries.

As my own old Lit Prof used to say, "Youse pays your nickel, and youse takes your chances."

Jon Awbrey, 17 March 2009, 5:00pm EDT

Jon Awbrey

Fri 20th March 2009, 2:25am

Goose Island — Si

Wikipedia —

QUOTE

Actually, It's Spelled "Encyclopædia Britannica"

Re: "Think of what would happen if the Encyclopedia Britannia could be edited by a couple of guys bubbling a few Goose Island Nut Brown Ales, watching PTI, and shooting the breeze on their cell phones."

Then I'm guessing that elementary school students who have to write papers on the U.S. Senate would find themselves faced with sorting fact from fiction, not to mention libel, both subtle and gross, on a recurring basis and on a scale as indicated by the following study:

We are 50+ comments into this conversation, at long last someone (you) cuts through the fog of glamour and glitz to raise one of the most brass tacks issues of scholarship — and my experience tells me that this blip on the Internet radar will long ago have skipped off the edge of most folks' increasingly short attention spans. A week, or a month from now, yet another Internet columnist (perhaps the same one) will write another splash of colour commentary on the same subject — rinse and repeat until our brains are thoroughly sham-poohed.

In hopes of initiating an alternative to all that, I have opened a topic in the Meta-Discussion Forum of The Wikipedia Review, and invite anyone who would like to attempt a more thorough discussion to sign on there: